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Friday July 20 1:37 PM ET 

Study Sees Earth's Temperature Soaring by 2100

By Will Dunham

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Earth will become a much hotter place over the next 
century, according to researchers who predict in a study published on Friday 
there is a 90 percent chance the planet's average temperatures will rise 3 to 
9 degrees Fahrenheit by 2100.

Researchers at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, 
Colorado, used a computer model to predict probable long-term increases in the 
Earth's temperature if no actions are taken to curb the emissions of gases and 
pollutants that many scientists blame for global warming.

The researchers said the planet has warmed up by about 1 degrees over the last 
century. But they say it is likely to heat up by about 1 or 2 degrees as early 
as 2030.

By 2100, the most likely increase would be in the range of 4 to 7 degrees, 
while there is a 90 percent chance global average temperatures will rise 3 to 
9 degrees, they said.

Tom Wigley, the lead researcher, said a broad range of possible long-term 
temperature changes does little to assist policy makers. For example, an 
estimated global warming range of 2.5 to 10.4 degrees was announced this year 
by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), established in 1988 
by the U.N. World Meteorological Organization and U.N. Environment Program.

Wigley said the new study aimed to tell policy makers what level of global 
warming is most likely.

World leaders have been at loggerheads over what steps governments need to 
take to reduce emissions -- especially after the United States withdrew in 
March from the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, a global deal to cut pollution.

UNCERTAINTIES WEIGHED

He said the computer model sought to account for various uncertainties that 
could impact warming.

``There are two that absolutely dominate,'' Wigley, whose study appears in the 
journal Science, said in an interview.

``One is human beings, and uncertainties in things like population and 
economic growth and technological development and awareness of environmental 
issues. Those human and socioeconomic uncertainties essentially produce a very 
wide range of possible emissions for the gases that might cause changes in 
climate in the future,'' he added.

The other primary uncertainty factor, Wigley added, is just how sensitive the 
Earth's climate system is to man-made influences.

Some critics say there is scant evidence of a man-made cause of global warming.

New estimates of sulfur dioxide and other emissions, along with updated 
information on carbon storage, ocean circulation, radiation, and other 
components of the Earth system have improved computer climate models, the 
researchers said.

Even aggressive action to curb so-called greenhouse emissions and other 
factors that may contribute to global warming may be too late prevent 
continued temperature rises, Wigley said.

``The climate system is like a giant flywheel. Even if we do a lot of things 
in the near future to try to reduce emissions or reduce the growth of 
emissions, then the system has a lot of inertia and it is going to keep 
warming for a long, long time,'' Wigley said.

``So already in place are a lot of unavoidable climate change consequences no 
matter what we do. But that doesn't mean we should give up. And there are a 
lot of things we can do. And what we have to do is balance the economic cost 
against the environmental cost.''

In a commentary in Science, experts at the Massachusetts Institute of 
Technology and the University of North Carolina note the difficulty in making 
such temperature predictions.

``Future emissions of greenhouse gases, their climatic effects and the 
resulting environmental and economic consequences are subject to large 
uncertainties,'' said the experts, led by MIT's John Reilly.

Many scientists believe emissions of certain pollutants from industry, power 
plants, vehicles and other sources threaten to disrupt global climate and 
ecosystems by causing the Earth's atmosphere to trap more of the sun's energy, 
triggering global warming. 


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